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U.S. military training missions are an economical way to promote security and good governance and to support our friends and allies and prepare them to tackle these problems on their own, as well as help other countries in the region.
In an attempt to protect poor, uninsured and underinsured Americans from unsafe drugs, we are making sure that some go without drugs completely. It is time the law was changed.
Authorities should focus on India's real health problem: fake and substandard medicines.
American Enterprise Institute (AEI) economist Roger Bate shares his expertise on counterfeit drug networks that pose a growing threat to combating diseases like malaria.
In a just-published op-ed in the New York Times, American Enterprise Institute (AEI) international health economist Roger Bate highlights a better way to fight fake pharmaceuticals while still giving poor Americans access to less costly drugs from online pharmacies.
The medical profession has suffered some serious self-inflicted wounds, and a new book by Carl Elliott focuses on how he thinks medicine has gone wrong but is short on solutions.
While safety concerns about drugs purchased over the Internet may be overblown, concerns that the equalization of drug prices will decrease drug innovation are understated.
Fake drugs flourish in areas where government oversight is poor and private-sector accountability is weak, but failing to prevent counterfeit drug sales can have deadly consequences.





